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Silver Screen Paperback – October 3, 2005
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She’s put to the test when Roy kills himself in an experiment to upload his mind into cyberspace, seeking that SF dream of bodiless immortality, which doesn’t work as expected. At the same time her boyfriend’s research has led to him harnessing himself to dubious biomechanoid technologies, which pull the user into mental symbiosis, creating hybrid consciousness – a new "I", continuous with the old, but different. "Where does life end and the machine begin?"
Meanwhile Anjuli’s grasping multinational employer, OptiNet, the owner of global communications AI, 901, is locked into an increasingly bitter war with the Machine-Greens, who preach AI liberation. As the case for 901’s humanity, or otherwise, comes up before the Strasbourg Court, expert witness Anjuli is targeted by assassins and entangled in the hunt for an algorithm which is the key to machine consciousness, and which may even be the master-code of life itself.
This story explores many interfaces between humans and their technologies, between the promises of science and the explanations of faith. It is written in a first-person style that mingles elements of detective story and confessional. Alongside its SF content, the book delves into the complexities of friendship, loyalty, love, and betrayal from an intimate human perspective.
This is "grrrl-style" SF: as well as all the favorite "Airfix" features, the protagonists deconstruct personal relationships amidst macrocosmic and deeply philosophical goings-on. The writing is punchy, but with a literary sheen. It delivers complex concepts and a twisting plot with a deceptively light touch.
- Print length383 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherPyr
- Publication dateOctober 3, 2005
- Dimensions6.03 x 1.09 x 8.96 inches
- ISBN-101591023386
- ISBN-13978-1591023388
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Editorial Reviews
From Publishers Weekly
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About the Author
Visit Justina Robson's Web site at www.JustinaRobson.com.
Product details
- Publisher : Pyr; Reprint edition (October 3, 2005)
- Language : English
- Paperback : 383 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1591023386
- ISBN-13 : 978-1591023388
- Item Weight : 1.3 pounds
- Dimensions : 6.03 x 1.09 x 8.96 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #6,577,675 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #233,158 in Science Fiction (Books)
- Customer Reviews:
About the author

Justina was born in Yorkshire, England, in 1968. She sold her first novel in 1999. Since then she has won the 2000 Amazon UK Writers’ Bursary Award. She has also been a student (1992) and a teacher (2002, 2006) at the Arvon Foundation in the UK. She was a student at Clarion West, the U.S. boot camp for science fiction and fantasy writers, in 1996.
Her books have been variously shortlisted for the British Science Fiction Best Novel Award, the Arthur C. Clarke Award, the Philip K. Dick Award, and the John W. Campbell Award. An anthology of her short fiction, Heliotrope, was published in 2012. In 2004, Justina was a judge for the Arthur C. Clarke Award, on behalf of the Science Fiction Foundation.
You can find insights about her writing and content previews at her Patreon page - www.Patreon.com/JustinaRobson
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This time it was more interesting at the beginning and ever more interesting as the story developed. The end was a surprise to me although some of you may see it coming. I found myself wanting to email the author and ask her if I got it right.
If you have read her most recent series you will find this book slower moving. Nonetheless I think it is worth the time to read it.
Or smart young adults, really. In the beginning this book has a 'school for the gifted' in a future setting, but nowhere near as extreme as the X-Men, or the Battle School, or even the institution in Shiras' Children of the Atom. This one is more of a corporate competition type of place.
The book focuses on one of these children, there largely because she has perfect memory, being able to recall anything from her past. This makes lots of exams etc. rather easy.
The other important characters and a brother and sister, the former becoming a brilliant if unconventional and unstable AI researcher, and the other bailing. The last is the latest generation of the AI owned by the company they work for, known as 901, or Nine for short.
A slow starting book builds to a rather more surprising conclusion with a trial for the rights of an Artificial Intelligence these people work for, and the latter part of the book is certainly worth waiting for. It has biodroid power armour, too.
Top reviews from other countries
At the same time, there were many passages in the book that I simply didn't understand & had to skip over. I'm not talking about moments in novels set in the future when some presently unknown piece of technology is being referred to in passing without an explanation. I can cope with this & it's quite nice in a way, because if we were transported from the early C21 to some future time, there would be things that would puzzle us. No, there were simply mention of characters' responses or actions that didn't seem to fit into the sequence of action & which didn't make sense later on either. I suspect the book needed stricter editing, or even pruning, so I'm not entirely blaming the author.
I do read good things about JR's other books so will probably move on to the next one before too long.
The production however, whilst not being Robson's fault, is appalling. I don't know where they got the digital copy for this ebook but it looks like it was from the draft, unedited manuscript. It is full of spelling errors, formatting errors, missing words, meaningless words; name any production errors and I guarantee you will find them somewhere in this edition. It made reading the book painful and quite possibly, subconsciously at least, may have resulted in me rating this book lower than I otherwise would have done.



